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1908. .. .. .00 -. ...........1.50 i gee . Postoffce as Class Matter. A UP. b~ those '; eeiving, notice of t~ fptpions to the pa e hxpirihg are requested to k. thers remittances without ¢y. The amount due from th Individual is small, but the total runs into many hundred if.iiars. Therefore, we request a, settlement. *-~ 4 ·14-4*-*- *- * .-4 Tuesday, August 18, 1903. GROVER IS LISTENING. if any' doubt has existed as to the t$fyivlty of Grover Cleveland as re des the democratic nomination next ,. eyents now passing should be eted as tolerably strong proof of .' ld, gentleman's perfect willing to9 elevate his lightning rod to heieght suficient to attract the bolt r w seemingly hovering in the politi `ly!. He may continue his denials aspiraison in that direc,,on, but he ptongly impresses the country as a zman who has his ear to the ground ind is not permiting any sound, no atter how faint, to escape him. Not niyy has he forced himself to over dome uas well known prejudice against . West to the extent of promising to aiift Ohioago next month and deliver ' .address, "absolutely free of poll tes," so he says, but the amiability of Ind in which he suddenly finds him ,f is ao great that he has accepted f itvitaition to extend his journey so .jriest s to take him ilto Minnesota ~ ge in the pleasures of a hunt or pralirie chickens. Of course, like that to Chicago, coming excrsion into Minnesota no policical significance whatever d any intimation that he was mak iag it for the purpose of improving l·is chances as a receptive candidate for the nomination of his party would be indignantly resented. Still, strong minded as he is, Mr. Cleveland knows ,that no man can get ioo old 'to learn. going to Minnesota and keeping his s open 'he may learn a great deal. While that state is only one of 'the y western commonwealths, by ob erving the trend of opinion there he y be able to form a tolerably fair mas to the situation in general prughout the west. That state, like the others in the west, has under e a decided change politically ae Grover was in the white house. known as Bryan has arrived ine- then and he has caused a new ment of political forces. Some of Smet who were leaders when Cleve w wa on: top thve been lost sight end others now direct and manage, who were unknow'n during the em of a democratic administration. ,o eampaigns have been fought in e.sp.. that have passed since he and the memory of how he t. still oherWieed and the spirit výess is probably not so great pema who are now the leaders pe.oapt them to forgive him b are place him at the head it. Dieated though he has x nB 46,e0tsl i conoderaable Au . while they ke him back as e;yeland will 'fnd eat can be only in adrker in the ranks. riv dropped sil W, ready to take of t h gold twould :mew, RenO "tbour s· tie °6f the deii_ o Minne ·scti anM the thel .#estern "states "wu d vote for his opponent. .With the .prospect that the secre tary of war will recommend: to con gross that it .pass a law -permitting beer and-other light drinke to be sold at army posts as before the day when the people who are so highly ii terested in the. moral welfare of the enlisted men succeeded in having the "canteen" abolished, comes another subject of interesting speculation. It will be worth while to see whether congressional hypooricy is great enough to ignore the secretary's rec ommendation and decline to give to the soldiers of tihe country to a small degree the same privilege that the dietinguished senators and represen tatives accord ithemselves. If congress considers it wrong .to, lei.state the "canteen" it should be consistent and abolish the barrooms maintained in the capitol. Cyclops Tillman stops long enough in his advocacy of the shotgun rule for "nggers" and the burning of hu man beings at the stake to set up a most lusty howl over the loss of his book of railroad passes. With his free transportation gone and he com pelled to pay railroad fare the same as cther men the one-eyed terror would find it less profitable than he now does to travel over the country preaching his doctrines of hatered and anarchy. Soulless as corporations may be, it is to be hoped that the railroads will for once give evidence of the possession of one of the hu man attributes-pity--and decline ,to furnish the distinguished blatherekite with new passes. By doing so they will spare many a community the pangs of acute mental Suffering. Having given the change a thorough trial, Secretary Root has arrived at the conclusion t'hat a mistake was made when the army "canteen" was abolished and will recommend its res toration by congress. It, is said that' he has a number of confidential re ports from army officers all over the country showing the interest of the service would be best subserved by permitting again light drinks to be sold under proper restrictions at the different posts and garrisons. Dysentery Cured Without the Aid of a Doctor. "I am Just up from a ' hard spell of the flux" (dysentery), says Mr. T. A. Pinner, a well known merchant of Drummond, Tenn. 'I used one small bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera' and Diarrhoea Remedy and was cured without having a doctor. I consider it the best cholera medicine in the world." There is no need of employ ing a doctor when this remedy is used, for no doctor can prescribe a better medicine for bowel complaint in any form either for children or adults. It never fails and is pleasant to take. For sale by all druggists. AT THE ELK. Home Cooking and Hotel Service. Meals ,to transients, 50c. Board, per day, $1.25. Board, per week, $7.50. Board, per montn, $25.00.' Board, per month, two meals a day, $20.00. Breakfast, 6:i30 to 8:30. Dinner, 12:00 to 2:00. Supper, 6:00 to 7:30. Sundays---Breakfast, 8:30 to 10:00; Dinner, 3:30 to 5:00. Rooms furnished with modern con veniences, by day, week or month, Parties desiring the comforts of home should stop at The Elk. New brick, two blocks north of depot, Twenty-eighth street. ks14 Dqn't Forget Me. When you are placing youir ,nsur ance. My companies and ratei can not be excelled. Edgar B. COmp, Pust National bank building. 1 54-t Physician and Druggists. Ford & Sturgeon a prominent -drug firm at Rocky Hill Station, Ky_, write: "We were requested by Dr. G. -B. Sig ley t'o send for. Herbine for the bente. fAt of our customers. We ordered three dozen in-December, and we care gigd to say, Herbine has given such great satisfaction that we have duplicated this order three times, and today we :gve your salesman another order. ·bgg to say Dr. G. B Snigley takes in reqosmrending Herbine.' 'b at Cehomes & Rixon's. r'a x"a ofI' ý ' +f C t^ý5 ,Ji ý r ut V AArid Att ,; t J The rising i ,l n in .'"n ik is th . ques tn o bfj for ahe-o hin iti q ,:a 16is tecting e tdi ts ~ dulres of: the world. - - t. is an Issue that will 1j.e (olmC Areacu from dents. . for Il. pSopoas -'the and the ec nomio1x policy methic atsets oul unchallnen:.e for half a:. tury and uinder which the doryadow fI Btitlsh market 'have remained open to all naltion s. And what is the object of ithe pry; posed revolubionary change?. im word, the preservation atndgehi.e meat of the prosperity of the.&I, empire. To be mliore speclfi,.the i s: to develop a wid6 and lmarket in the colonies for the aol Of English industries and to hold -the forty million consumers of Greatl tnhaas a bome market for the cojotl agrdcultural products. The fact is that England is hard hit by thie enormous commercial expan saon of the United States. We"a4 selling our manufactured goods to its'i own people in the very shadow of, its factories. We are furnishing the. brtad and mpat to feed its subsjeote We are selling all sorts of nhgeaiohus machinery, Including agricultural 'm plements, to its colonial inhabitantse yes, and building their bridges, sum plying their locomotives and installinlg their electrical plants. We are rapid ly making the Brmitish eohire a' sort of commrercial province-a dumoa grobthd for the surplus product ofg o farms, our mines and our fawtories. So ominous bans this suituaile iid t come that Joseph Ohamberi , shrewdest of English statesmen, willing to stake. his power and his fame upon the startling proposition to. abandon free trade and adopt pro tection as the only possible meant of saving his country from a condli thon of economic dependence, which, in his opinion, -has already become dangerous and 'may soon become ab What Jt Means to America. In the meantime . Americans have something to think of. They may well indulge in a moment of pride at the thought that the struggling peo ire who, 'little more than a century ago, snatched up the sword to dcut themselves loose from Great Britadin, have so soon vanquished the mother country on the economic field. But "pride goeth before a fall." If a mar ket which now absorbs forty per cenit of ou export trade shall be closed against us, where and how are we to Imake good so vast a deficit? That is a question which omay only be answered when we understand the true explanation .of our success and of our strength. The economic greatness of the Unit ed States is the fruit of a policy of pealeful conquest over the resources of a virgin continent Without this grealtitem bf raw material, the finished produdt which the world acknowledges in the iniustrial America of today would have been impossible. We shall find continued national supremacy where we found it in the first place--In the developmpnit of out boundless and magnificent resour ces. Those who say that the conquest of this continent "is now complete" sp;kk idly, or know not whereof they speak. The conquest of this continent is but begue. Great West Almost Untouched. If England has its Oanada, its South Africa and ita Ausitralasia-ito which it now doks "to pluck the flower, Safety, from the nettle, Ianger"-we have our Colorado. Wyomigr anyd Mon tna, our Uitah, Idaho and hevada, our Washington, Oregon and 9atioannia, our- New Mezico, Arizona, end Okla homni-n all, 17 states and territories w'th which 'to hold level, and more than nqvel, the fEarfluing dependerces of the British empire, And these undeveloped lands of ours are not divided by tTr seen seias, but stand side by aide, oulder to shoulder, their citise.s clasping hands across boiders 'thatare only imaginary. Here is a market. forth.e outrpt of out shops and flenetores pobedisaUlly greater than Oreat Batstitn and asll its colonies 'wibh their present popuistisa. Here is ea "empire" which leagusy enjoys nistestritbed free itade w~blitstt~self, tileocmpealed by "preferesltfal tawiffe" againsta 't-tv1 worl4. A popultit of one hundred millions might live in prosperous contentment in the far west. Theer- s everything to Inspire and reward their industry the haerm of Plmhte and of scenery, the (ertlifty of the sI1, the unihiadg pauble wealth of watr-, 4foret anid m , and, areoss the Pacitc, new Wridc tO oo lnqger. But fthe United States ma ynot rest upon ltiwunoits sad r·sin its suo-em asy. It-asset keep on 'with its'bstorto poicry of olEUeatdou. FIt uSt (oblise oble numie 1 unl.nt n a eat about it hibe doiý' e. , 'iti.'to There tC one conit isof n w ti-o hich it cvanc possblye tsd Tis. ` ab ous t h. t be used .lt6o.erats n 'dependent hemes for the largt pos 'sble number of human e. ings, Ad Sresult, ois turin,." e ied.: . thing els-t.tn hp ion p.+11 tan the ownership of 1.i` eni: t h an until the hgone . tile ' nepeklri me-owner and hoile-builda Is ready come hiot his heritage. Existing land lawGs ar ill-souited to. &:iditions in the west. The have been persistently used to enable spec iAhtons and adventuiers to aci;uire public prperty for ,prvate enxploitidon. aid the whole object of national irri b alon will be defeated unless it is u6pped by the early action of con Fortuntgte beyond al' other nations the possessdon of .a 'vt field of domestic colonization and Internal -ei pansion, the repiblice ill repent in. iter ness aeny ftiiser dieln .a in ire wpaling the desert land lawi the tim clotause of the homest'od got. And Ilds may only be done by an aroutsed; anstenIt and unocompromiating pirblie opinion. The president lei taken-the nyititive in officially and publicly do txouncing these laws. Will the people support him? THE HOPPER PLAGUE. Professes Coiey Gives Some Advice on the Subject. Professor Cooley, state entomologist, is ,still conducting his experiments with the culture of parasites supposed tdxbe deadly to grasshoppers. He has sent 160 tubes of cultures to different pasrts of the state, with the ,request that the efficacy of the su posed remnedy be given a -thorough trtal. In addition he is experimenting wi h some of the insets in captivity. n of the paraeitic diseases that he and still another is of native origin. rSo fr thie profesor is unable to give anything in the way ocf authentic in formation on the subject, as every thing is as yet in an experimental stage: i;, cultivated regions;, Professor Coonly aeys, the surest preventive of grai hoppers is fall plowineg, which de sts the eggs. He is especially ourged -1tt wherever possible this plo ig be done th's !all- :where the gran iopers have been at g all trouble sone this year. In the case of slngle fields they may, perhaps, be protected next -year .by trenches and pits.' Of cou ie, :none of these exie tents can be u d on the ranges. , rs sbre that dependence must be placed chief ly oi the culture of some disease that will' 'exterminate, or at .least lessen the iniber of the pests. In the case oft the '-hoppers with which 'rhe professor is experimenting not aufingeneItra nce. has been made to ]sti fyn theport from Mm 'In sna:s This I. parallole4 by the (ni butiLdj nz l one cellar, butivect for ~ies diseases For sl by' lJl felng& -~EY useq, 3019 Ie D *. stu fi h with e n abel~cs Oti ~ rgh u'$n wrltes Je F. Ue~b DuP~ijt, r3.."aind gsavOgg*alip !1 buI atcugh't my tliembad eoue t a la rtsort I tried Dr. 1lng'%- New Dls w or Consumption. tee bo fit esived -Was @ptriklag Simi j on4 o iya a tow dqs. Now Ia -: cr~q.7- --~'b t .ý T n~t n " ..- 'ý ., .j 44.ýSý,y,'ý,;1ý pw ý ý BACK TO RESD LODGE" Etland, Alleged Murderer, I. Removed Sheriff Potter of Garboni -county aine own tfrom aiRed Lodg, iiiWay' `ev'aing fur thb8 purpose o ti . ing back uthe i'nan ltlad, whoo is 'Mged With themurdea of Endwawd T ale near 'Brd er, eevi al wek, 'ago. E'or a week or so 'l)tand was confined -In the jall hirer as the Red Lodge Jail is not considered se4ure. Mr.. Pot ter raturaed with his prisoner -last Moa~day moaing. g. FDtland I's a yjoun-g man and only for 'he 'handcuffs ,he wore would, never have been picked out of a crowd as a criminal, certanloy not a murderer. He4 is more than of average height and apparently possessed of ufficient strength to successfully cope with any o dplaary man. A sm~le played con nuallly about th. icorners of his com prssed lips and aside from a nervous manner of moving 'his feet and handse seemed not to be auffering from the awful strain unmder whiteh- be evidently mnust have laboied. A-fter he, was 1i.ted in the car h.t.urlously surveyed all 'ýatt' eizered and occasionally look ed at the handcuffs and toyed ..ith them. Just before the train left thee station -the raised the window `and looked up and daown the track as though trying to find aome one':whom he-knew. It is said ~iit at one ti·e, shortly before he killed TeMadole, he was was emplojed a.s sectiin .hand: by the NOrthern Pacific in thib 'iqty and it was apparently wirth the desire to see some of 'his former codipstnibnt that he so carefully scanned -the. fea tures of all whom he saw and looked about the yards... Monday wps th dyrsetii r th t aice panel g of . a fjurt fory iet 1e o lr Carbon county and Judge HIiS y ror dred iWtland ` be in count in thit day- 'for anr raig iiu t Boy Cured of Coli After Phylcian'u Treatmient Mad Failed, My boy,' when four. years, o1was taken with coe 'and' i;ampss rln, his toh.' :I ;sent for'the 4 o4o and he Iteied morphine, but the child Colic, (hlen, nd Diarrhoea Remedy; nhW Arty ~ 5. ""- ~iih' l h his .n i' SENATE REFUSES TO RATIFY CANAL TREATY. ENE0ED FOR THE PRES.T Probable That President arroquin May Submit t ,Again in , : Amended Form. Wahsingnop, Aug. 17,iýA. e egra , -dWated August, 12, rs. ban been: i ed at 4the elate department from Minister 'aupre, at .Bogota, .saitng that .the *Panama ca nal treatylias been rejected by the_ Colombian senate. President Roosevelt was immediate ly advIsed of the news, Mr. Baupre's itelegram being, forwarded to Oyster "Litlte additional information con. oernig the ation of hme Color-: .biW senate could' ,be obtained at the .si~te department. M , .dee Rti.l,, apretary, coul t.i e what cours the United State would4 nrsu. It will be: mpossible tor "resident s ' Mar'rroquf.n to again" ubmit the: treaty to the. Colombia n ongrees In its pres ept, form.. The tresty cannot -agal.. i "'rimen, Syef wev4 V e tboy 'r' th treity, Slglyti ai on leal. tol the seon .ite,. and reopen th . l 'as tjebate. . :,.,.eiev Pa.td UC.m Iaa,,i e ao.fl se4 . +hl, p ro ced u., ip ofthe Cangrgetional churm l n~tertaln; alri flen s of tAe chur~ch odefty on the lawn of Mrs. . 8. >1ol + North Thtieth street, W e A~ugust 19. Ice ore amnd cake, 1. bents. Th Slg regg (Wm wants.iie, atn inatroduce;Bra"'a gn f superior an e pepatculars ritory" Ja tw6 f i ·hel plteh i~